The Light Fantastic irish stained glass art Curated by Mary Boydell and Audrey Whitty
preface The Light Fantastic is touring North America through International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC.
It is about eighteen months ago since we discussed the possibility of mounting an exhibition, which would highlight the importance of the stained, painted and etched tradition of glass art in Ireland. Eventually the ideal venue of such a momentous event in Irish contemporary glass art became the National Craft Gallery in Kilkenny. We both believed this location to be a natural progression of the joint purchase scheme for the acquisition of Irish contemporary applied arts by the National Museum of Ireland and Crafts Council of Ireland begun on an annual basis in 2004. As a result this is the first time a curator from the former has been involved in organising an exhibition in the headquarters of the latter. The chosen works from the joint purchase scheme are under the ownership and care of the National Museum. Audrey Whitty as Curator of Ceramics and Glass collections, NMI is the selector of contemporary material in these mediums under the scheme, and has both published and lectured on contemporary applied arts. Mary Boydell’s involvement as President of the Glass Society of Ireland and a major advocate and authority on glass art, both historical and contemporary, has been crucial to the success and vision of the project. This exhibition represents many years’ commitment by Mary to the artistic genre that is Irish glass.
The Light Fantastic: Irish Stained Glass Art opened during Kilkenny Arts Festival August 2007.
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Audrey Whitty Curator, National Museum of Ireland – Decorative Arts & History, Collins Barracks, Dublin Mary Boydell President, Glass Society of Ireland Curators of ‘The Light Fantastic: Irish Stained Glass Art’
Firstly we would like to thank the significant work of each of the twelve participating artists, without whose skill no exhibition would have been possible: Donna Coogan, Debbie Dawson, Nora Duggan, Eva Kelly, Peadar Lamb, Mary Mackey, Sandra Miley, Patrick Muldowney, Killian Schurmann, George Walsh, Elke Westen and Peter Young. We would also like to thank Dr. Nicola Gordon Bowe for her magnificent introduction. Her contribution underlines the necessity to marry academic interpretation of the highest standard with contemporary developments in the visual arts. In the Crafts Council of Ireland, we would like to acknowledge Vincent O’Shea and Brian Byrne of the National Craft Gallery. In the National Museum of Ireland we thank the Director, Dr. Patrick F. Wallace; the Head of Collections, Raghnall O Floinn; and the Keeper of the Art & Industrial Division, Michael Kenny for their ever constant support and encouragement.
glazing images What makes artists turn to glass rather
no evidence of any surviving stained glass
constructive relations …between stained
which may carry deep personal or emo-
than to any other two dimensional
being produced in Ireland much before
glass and painting… through the sympa-
tional significance, offering an inner world
medium to convey their designs and ideas?
the eighteenth century affected people’s
Is it because they have become captivated
attitudes to making it here?
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thetic influences” of these three artists?
of reflection and contemplation. Their work is in public and private collections at
Such questions may not immediately occur by its processes while studying glass at art
home and abroad, where it has been exhibAre there differences between the work
to those who visit the Crafts Council of
designed and made by men and by the
Ireland’s first exhibition of free-standing,
many women artists who have found
portable glass panels. These have been
expression through stained glass since
made, some specifically for this exhibition,
the beginning of the twentieth century?1
by people living in Ireland whose profes-
college, or because they are drawn to its
ited in individual and group exhibitions
timeless permanence, its intense colours
not necessarily dedicated to glass as a
and the way the sunlight can activate and harmonize these as it passes through
medium in its wider dimensions, or even to specifically crafted media. However,
painted and structural lines and fired
exhibiting glass which is not three dimensional lives are committed to working in
textures?
Is it true that stained glass is an art of
sional or architecturally integrated means various two dimensional forms of painted,
sunless countries, as the French writer What are the special qualities that lure
2
that it is more likely to be shown alongside enamelled, etched, kiln-formed, fused,
Emil Mâle suggested? That only in the
other work in the same medium because plated, leaded and/or stained glass. As
them to work with a challenging, volatile subdued light of Northern Europe can the
of the need to ensure the light is always with any art, some of them have been
material whose processes are as ancient as deep rich blues and rubies that we know
behind a panel. This was the principle trained as graphic designers and book
any but much more difficult to effectively from the great Gothic cathedrals of France,
behind ‘Ag Damhsa le Solais (The Dance illustrators, others as sculptors or painters.
manipulate than its enticing translucency such as Chartres, smoulder and glow with
of Light)’ exhibition held in the Spiddal in Some have followed glass courses, others
and sumptuous colours might suggest? the magical jewelled light that Ireland’s
1997, to which eight of the present artists have taught them or encouraged children
Are they more likely to choose glass in
own master glass artists, Harry Clarke,
contributed panels, and the Glass Society to make stained glass panels of their own.
a country which has a long tradition of
Wilhelmina Geddes and Evie Hone were
of Ireland’s 2003 travelling ‘Contemporary Some work traditionally, others embrace
stained glass which they can see in mediae-
able to uniquely recapture in the first half
Irish Glass Art’ exhibition, which also the possibilities offered by developing
val buildings around them, as in Germany,
of the twentieth century? How did it
included several current exhibitors.4
photographic and fibre-optic technologies. France and Britain, countries with strong
Without light, natural or artificially
happen that, after the wave of “demoralSome see their work as sculpture, others
contemporary stained glass studios,
boxed, each work shown here cannot be
ized Gothic” glass imported in the 19th have taken on installation possibilities or
built on years of artistic and commercial
seen. Even surface reflection can substan-
century, Ireland was to play a major internafull-scale architectural challenges. And
practice? Has the fact that there is so far
tially reduce its depth and effect. Careful
tional role in re-establishing “positive some make narrative or symbolic panels,
1
See Peter Cormack, Women Stained Glass Artists of the Arts & Crafts Movement (William Morris Gallery, London 1985) and the ongoing catalogues of the Women’s International Stained Glass Workshop since 1989. Both feature Irish artists.
2
Emil Male, Religious Art in France: XIII Century: A study in Mediaeval Iconography and its Sources of Inspiration (J.M. Dent, London 1913)
3 4
John Piper, Stained Glass: Art or Anti-Art (Studio Vista, London 1968)
This opened during their major ‘Inspirational Awakening: Historical and Contemporary Glass’ international workshops and conference in Waterford.
observation of the varied surfaces of each
to counter criticisms of the quantity of
mediaeval glass so much admired by the
Hone’s renowned 18-light Eton College
exhibit here will show how differently
inferior trade windows being imported
Gothic Revivalists. Between c.1912-1937,
Chapel window outside London persuaded
each artist has treated the glass; whether
into Ireland. Following the Arts and Crafts
artists of the calibre of Michael Healy and
the painter Patrick Pollen to move to
they have painted or barely marked its
ideology expounded in Christopher
Wilhelmina Geddes used a dazzling range
Dublin in 1953, where he worked in her
5
surface, stippled, enamelled, sand-blasted
Whall’s seminal text, Stained Glass Work ,
of Norman slab and ‘flashed’glass in full
idiom, eventually inheriting her studio
or acid-etched it, whether they have
that each person be responsible for every
scale windows, both ecclesiastical and
contents. His contemporary, Patrick Pye,
slumped and worked at it in a kiln, plated
stage in the production of a window, they
secular, as well as in small autonomous
was similarly affected by Hone’s 1958
or fused it, joined the separate pieces with
designed, drew out, selected the glass, and
panels done as commissions and for exhibi-
memorial exhibition, which led him to
H-shaped lead to set up its own rhythm
painted and stained it before it was cut and
tion. Their contemporary Harry Clarke,
emulate the spirit of her work with Pollen
in the composition, or added extrusions.
leaded up. As happens today, the sheets of
based at his family’s decorating premises,
after he had studied stained glass at what
It will also show how important the very
glass they used were made in England,
did likewise to widespread critical acclaim,
is now NCAD with Johnny Murphy (with
nature of each piece of glass is in transmit-
France or Germany and transported
mounting microscopically detailed,
whom Pat Muldowney, represented in this
ting the images and concepts its designer
here, where the many tints were carefully
double-plated panels illustrating scenes
exhibition, trained). Pye continues to
has suggested, how every little air bubble,
labelled and stored in racks. With virtually
from his favourite writers in cabinets with
make small abstract panels to hang against
streak, wisp of silver wire, brush stroke,
no native tradition to consult, they turned
diffusing sheets to spread the light behind
clear windows. His studio was visited in
modulation of tone and depth can affect
to Romanesque sculpture, Early Christian
them. In 1932, the semi-abstract Cubist
the late 1970s by James Scanlon and Maud
our perception of the inner world
illumination, enamelling and metalwork
painter, Evie Hone, turned to Geddes to
Cotter,versatile sculpture and mixed-
conjured up before us.
and helped to re-invent the figurative
learn the craft of stained glass, excelling
media graduates of the Cork School of
imagery of the Celtic Revival by applying
in small-scale painted panels which were
Art, who had been so inspired by Harry
painterly and crafted skills to richly
a spiritual extension of her canvases. She,
Clarke’s Honan Chapel windows nearby
coloured glass of the highest quality.
in turn, instructed Louis le Brocquy, one
and their experiments with the kiln and
They were lucky to be able to avail of 19th
of several contemporary Irish artists to
glass stock provided by the School, that
Attention to the molten, textured and chromatically varied forms of glass as a receptacle for the passage of light was a key element in the approach adopted by
6
century technical experiments which had
experiment with stained glass , in making
they set out to learn how they could find
led to the manufacture of what was called
a series of small panels in the mid -1940s.
artistic expression in stained glass, while
the Irish artists whom the painter Sarah Purser recruited to An Túr Gloine (The ‘antique pot metal’, glass which emulated
expanding its time-honoured parameters.
Tower of Glass). This was the pioneering the depth, thickness and colour of the workshop she set up in Dublin in 1903 5
C.W. Whall, Stained Glass Work. A Text-Book for Students and Workers in Glass, (The Artistic Crafts Series of Technical Handbooks, London 1905)
6
Most recently, Hughie O’Donoghue in his meditative liturgical cycle for the curved glass walls of the Bon Secours Hospital Chapel, Galway, Dorothy Cross, Cecily Brennan, Marie Foley and Alice Maher have each included glass elements in conceptual work; see also the Sculptors’ Society of Ireland’s 1993 touring exhibition, ‘See Through Art’.
After four years self-taught apprenticeship
exhibition mounted by the Triskel Arts
of ecclesiastical or secular decoration"9.
cooled liquid which has retained its sense
together, learning the complexities of the
Centre on the occasion of the 1986 Glass in
Donna Coogan, with her handwritten,
of moisture”12, in the “inhabited aura”
craft, they set up independent studios in
the Environment conference in London, the
poetic texts enclosing exquisitely crafted
of fissures, waterfalls and the ancient
Cork, and began making small questing
well-known English stained glass figure,
symbolic yet still-realistic hearts,and
reservoirs of nature, is echoed in the
panels of great vigour and intensity, also
Patrick Reyntiens, wrote:
Debbie Dawson, starkly confronting her
magically ethereal crystalline landscapes
own innermost fears, her tiny protagonist
Killian Schurmann constructs in his kiln
assailed by blood-red slashes etched on
and in the meteorological ebb and flow of
blue, would readily concur with Scanlon’s
the contours of the Donegal coastline rep-
comment: “Glass, for me, is for things that
resented by Pat Muldowney. Her predilec-
tear the heart out of me – I would put them
tion for quizzical titles is a hallmark of
into glass. And they would mean a lot to
Peter Young’s endearing miniature visions
me. When you look at it, it brings a calm-
of surreal fantasy. The cursive dynamic
ness over you. I try to put that calmness
of Elke Westen’s triptych of intersected
into the glass. When it’s finished and the
whorling discs of enamelled primary
calmness comes out of it over me, then
colour recalls Cotter’s implosively drawn
working to commission and exhibiting in a fine art context to growing acclaim. In 1980, Cotter set up a stained glass department in the Cork School, where Mary Mackey and Debbie Dawson in this exhibition trained and now teach. Her experimental painting and drawing of biomorphic rhythms and the centrifugal forces of nature led to strongly coloured, psychologically intense pieces, increasingly sculptural and free-standing. Scanlon’s
“Thank goodness Ireland, so far, has not been absorbed into the world of hype and mega-aesthetic. The tradition of Ireland is one primarily of intrinsic, intensive art, the art of the object that can be held in the hand; and has significance because of its concentrated quality. It could be claimed that everything worthwhile is conceived small and proceeds to grow into its optimum size and strength”8.
10
it’s finished” . Nora Duggan has set her
small, meticulously acid-etched, unpainted
The legacy of Cotter, who has not now
vulnerable painted figures beside craters
panels, colour-registered through several
worked in glass for the past ten or so years,
of other-worldly sulphuric clouds akin to
layers of glass, synthesized musical,
and Scanlon, who has pushed the concep-
Scanlon’s atmospheric evocations. Mary
emotional and landscape elements from
tual and structural boundaries for his
Mackey shares Cotter’s aesthetic concern
his native Kerry landscape, his experience
stained glass installations further than
with the “subtle changes of light, and the
of dance and mime, and the “raw energy,
anyone, is clearly strong. The critic Aidan
evidence of the impact of time on land-
huge intensity and presence”7 he admired
Dunne credits them “with reviving stained
scape” through which to “explore [her]
in the paintings of Miro, Poliakoff,
glass as a medium of artistic expression –
personal vision of the relationship between
Rothko, Jackson Pollock and Francis
in the widest sense of the term – in Ireland,
natural energies and the human psyche”11.
Bacon. After ‘Cork Glass Art’, the shared
after its prolonged relegation to a form
Cotter’s fascination with “glass as being a
studies for glass. Although each piece in this exhibition is fundamentally a rectangular glass panel or series of panels, the different technical approaches used by each artist define his or her concept of the medium. George Walsh, Pat Muldowney, Peter Young and Peadar Lamb have, in time-honoured tradition, orchestrated their glass with lead and paint to accentuate the colours and tones of their idiosyncratic narrative compositions.
7
‘The Mastery of Darkness’, James Scanlon interviewed by Shane O’Toole, Tracings, Vol. 1, Spring 2000. Citing Harry Clarke’s use of paint, he said, “Sometimes I use paint, but I use it like ink on paper. I draw with it in a savage kind of a way, throw it down. It’s only powdered oxide…”. 8
Introduction, Works 1: James Scanlon. Sneem (Gandon Editions, Dublin 1991)
9
Aidan Dunne, ‘In the Shadow of a Big Heart’, Profile 12 – James Scanlon (Gandon Editions, Kinsale 2000).
10
Scanlon in ‘The Mastery of Darkness’, op.cit.
11
Maud Cotter, ‘Black Rivers Bite Deep’, Stet, March 1991.
12
Catalogue, Exhibition of Stained Glass, Paintings & Drawings by Maud Cotter Crawford Gallery, Cork 1983.
Peter Young’s panels incorporate won-
which is usually considered the most
drous pieces of sometimes re-worked glass
difficult to manage. Donna Coogan fuses
into freely painted, etched and leaded
plate and flashed glass with silver-wire
compositions of layers of delicious colour,
inclusions, yellow stain and black trace
inventive texture and pattern around an
firings before she bores tiny holes into the
ambiguous “cast of characters who act in
variously sized frames, inscribed panels
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mystical and strangely humorous ways” .
and wrapped heart panels in vivid blue,
Peadar Lamb’s calligraphic black lines,
ruby or brilliant silenium orange-red which
whether in lead or paint, dramatically
are her focus. Each is then connected with
invigorate his powerfully pared-down
deceptively fragile wire ties to its neigh-
peepholes of memory. Eva Kelly has dis-
bour and suspended inside a black outer
guised the copper foil lines which bind the
metal frame before being hung against a
streakily etched and stained glass around
window. One inner frame is
her boldly delineated jellyfish in its eery
acid-etched; the other is coated with the
submarine world. Nora Duggan presents
same black paint as the suspended panels,
a patchwork array of tiny slabs, abstractly
which are then inscribed to reveal the
treated on an aquatic theme and leads them
colour of the flashed glass beneath.
into a grid, like a pavement light. Mary As people increasingly lose sight of the Mackey conveys corroded, weathered radiating light of day and night, and gloss landscapes, encountered on her travels, over the elemental forces of nature, this through unleaded panels which she sandexhibition presents a chance to behold the blasts, enamels, spatters, drips on and transformations light can effect through paints in fine layers. Sandra Miley confines a range of creatively manipulated glass. her painting to acid-etching on a single glass sheet of deepest blue, the manipulation of © Nicola Gordon Bowe June 2007
13
Caroline Swash, review of ‘Strange Angels’ exhibition, CRAFTS (Nov/Dec. 1992).
artists
Donna Coogan Debbie Dawson Nora Duggan Eva Kelly Peadar Lamb Mary Mackey Sandra Miley Patrick Muldowney Killian Schurmann George Walsh Elke Westen Peter Young
Donna Coogan hands take over When there is heartache Hands take over. Someone will fill the oven With bread. Flour dust and Shoe prints mark the floor. Me..I can make hearts. I know how to cook glass. I cut and make. And my kiln bakes Stretched veins of silver wire Shaped, Between sheets. My glass lives in windows Between you and the light.
The heart is like a container of all experience from childhood to old age. I grew up among HEART stories, of love, needs and care. In a house where the breakfast room window was like a chemist. Two bus trips up to “The Bons� with my mother to see my dad in hospital. A smart, good humoured, much loved man, who did not survive heart surgery. I have had a long-time interest in the subject matter of the heart. Been intrigued by its shape, beauty, life force and sound. I try to recreate this in my glass work .I have read many a book, from the life of Christiaan Barnard who performed the first heart transplant to Irish writer Bill Long, who survived a heart transplant. I have also been influenced by the innovative work of Dr.Mehmet C. Oz, cardiovascular surgeon, who has written, and acted widely on the breakthrough of marrying cutting edge medical skills with alternative care, in preparation for heart surgery and aftercare lifestyles, which involves and empowers the patient in their own health. So the subject of this body of work is both personal and general. It is my response to the trauma and upset of ill health. It is also about joy, empathy with and empowerment of the individual from their own resources and the reassurance that care is there.
Debbie Dawson all the things i’m afraid of (series 1) (my worst nightmare) This new series of work is concerned with documenting my personal fears; in particular the fear of losing loved ones. In this triptych I am attempting to create a landscape of absence, loss, and fear. The stark imagery employed; the empty chair, the lone central figure, the static swing, attempts to convey a sense of despair and desolation. The red on blue flashed glass lends itself very well to this ideal. Using pared down imagery and simplified forms in this manner helps create a mechanism for embracing the terror.
Nora Duggan Lately I seem to be creating little worlds, neither reality nor fantasy, but somewhere in between. This is probably a result of my own search within my work practice. A shift has occurred in the past few years that I do not fully understand yet, although I find myself thinking about my connection or disconnection to my surroundings, time passing, a frozen glimpse, what is there one minute and gone the next. The intrinsic qualities of glass, its rich colour, texture, depth and transparency, make it a suitable medium for the atmosphere I am attempting to portray.
Eva Kelly mimosa & jellyfish As a teenager I spent many hours over a cup of coffee in Bewley’s studying the wonderful Harry Clarke windows, the minute details and the jewel-like spots of colour. I was hooked. While living in Australia I developed a deep relationship with nature and marine life. In my work I tried to transmit qualities of the natural environment… the textures and colours, and in doing so preserve experiences for posterity. My window ‘Jellyfish’ (Pelagia Noctiluca) was a response to the dichotomy that exists between such a beautiful creature and its poisonous sting. I used acid etching to create crisp lines, and copper foil to assemble the window to give more fluidity and translucency to the piece. ‘Mimosa’ was created using one sheet of glass and acid etching, painting and silver stain to give the wonderful delicate uplifting feeling that the tree gives when it blossoms. I try to create a sense of wonder in my work.
Peadar Lamb crann & oileรกn Visiting friends in Blacksod Bay, Co. Mayo last year I asked to be taken to a particular beach I had visited in the past. Standing on the beach looking out to sea, the view I saw and what I remembered were not the same, Achill Island was missing. When I asked where was this view of Achill, I was told that it was on the other side of the Bay. The memory was true, but the reality was not. It was at this point I realized that my memory (work) translates rather than illustrates. Generally, I do not like to work directly from a subject or place.To create a new piece, I absorb all the gathered elements relating to that piece, then I discard them; removing myself to work from memory so that I might reveal its essence. The work in this exhibition is not based on Blacksod Bay. Wherever you go you always take a part of that place with you. The land/seascapes in this exhibition though not specific, are perhaps like my memories from the beach in Blacksod; imagined. Crann stems from a time spent in Wicklow, in an area with large mature beech trees. Compositionally, the strong vertical tree divides and frames. In this piece the background is as important as the foreground. This is emphasised by the diagonal line rising from one of the branches, which disappears into the space beyond. It is further emphasised by the use of a warm pink so that the background is brought into the foreground. Oileรกn, though compositionally different, is derived from recollections of the same place. In these pieces the use of colour, the strong painted line and composition has the effect of flattening the image, with the perceived depth occurring as a result of the glass itself alongside the gritty paintwork.
Mary Mackey As a painter, a mark-maker, the strange, liquid-like properties inherent in glass fascinate and intrigue me. The play of transparency and opacity of glass, the depths of its shadows and the textures of its surface exert the same hold on my imagination that water does, whatever its form, sea, river, slow shifting mist, moving glacial ice, continually making its own mark however impermanent. Memories and making, the process of gathering, and sifting, allowing the layers to settle and seeing what rises to the surface, working the surface, etching into the glass, changing its density with sandblasting, carving the passage of light through the glass with pigment and enamels are all part of the magic of working with glass. The changing and shifting rhythms of landscape, nebulous flow of light and shade, imbued with the sensations provoked by a sense of place and time, has a strong influence on the visual structure of my work. The starting point of a piece is often a remembered image - the moon casting green blue glow over the sea at Cill Rialaig, cool rock, shushing sea-sounds, amber infused sky as I head West, heading home, flash blue of a mayfly on a still, silent day. Fleeting images in real time, but in my memory the image is sharply focused, connected with a particular place, a particular time. The impression, stored and enriched by the treasuring of it until it becomes expressed, through colour, light, and texture, layered together and worked on, changed, destroyed, and built on again until at least something of that essence is achieved.
Sandra Miley The minimalist beauty of the magnolia tree reveals itself in spring, when there is an absence of dense foliage. With this as a starting point, I observe how the play of light, passing through the opening petals, appears to illuminate these exotic flowers from within. Tracing each linear detail with my eye built on this theme: the elegance and balance of the supporting branches looks weightless, yet as functionary as electric cables. I open the exploration of a subject through detailed drawing. This work, ‘Magnolia Tree’, depicts a section of a larger drawing and potentially a larger artwork. A single sheet of cobalt blue flashed glass has been acid-etched with hydrofluoric acid. This technique enables me to trace the studied detail and immediacy of the drawn image onto the surface of one side of the glass. I choose not to cut a sheet of glass into patterns. Instead, I prefer to retain its tension in order to complementary juxtapose the fluid vitreous surface one looks through to see the image on the opposite side. The physical properties of this large, worked area of colour imitate a two-dimensional hydrostatic object whose properties are further enhanced by the movement of sunlight. I decided to suspend the glass against natural light, rather than “float” it away from a wall, as this optimises the transmittance of light, which was the elementary stimulus for the work.
Patrick Muldowney As a child I was totally lost and fascinated by the stained glass windows of my local church. As an artist working in glass today I am still just as fascinated by the light, colour and images that can be achieved by the application of different techniques to tell a story or create an atmospheric effect on an interior space. The stained glass of medieval cathedrals and the work of Irish stained glass artists of the early 20th century has inspired me to combine their traditional techniques with modern technology in order to produce contemporary solutions to both architectural and interior projects.
Killian Schurmann Finding a theme, creating a composition and deciding on the technique to apply for the best result is a process most painters go through in order to create their work. Working in glass panels demands the same process, but due to technical and intrinsic differences it does not allow the same flow and spontaneity in application of colour, which is not too dissimilar to watercolour. The result has to be achieved without layering too many colours. Reworking pieces and having more than one canvas on the go at any given time still tempts me to work in oil or acrylic paint. A fascination with glass and its unique qualities have made these limitations a hurdle to overcome and kept me experimenting, trying to find ways to let a picture evolve, keeping the quality of something that has been created in the moment and not overworked or spoilt with meticulous technique. It is exciting for me to see how a finished piece will be taken over by light and how the compositional focus can change depending on whether the light passes through the work or bounces off the opaque colours on the surface, where the changing daylight creates shadows which are constantly changing.
George Walsh George was born in Dublin and became an apprentice to his father, George S. Walsh, who was a pupil of the late Harry Clarke. He studied painting and stained glass in the Schools of Art in both Belfast and Dublin. Working in American Stained Glass during the 1960s, he subsequently returned to Dublin and worked with Irish practitioners in glass studios. He has collaborated with artists such as George Campbell, Gerry Dillon and Arthur Armstrong on stained glass commissions. By the late 1970s he started his own studio in Ranelagh, Dublin. Walsh is particularly renowned for his architectural commissions, some of which can be seen not only in Ireland, but also in the United States, Canada and Africa.
Elke Westen My ideas are mainly inspired by nature as the four elements earth, fire, water and air are transformed and integrated into my work. Also the changing of the seasons and the subtleties of light and colour change, greatly influence the appearance of the piece. The integration of artificial and/or natural light into my artwork is one essential part of my philosophy as an artist. For me working with glass is like painting with light. Glass, which forms the substrate of the image is transparent, thus making the ‘canvas’ visible from all angles. Background and foreground, the environment, both within and without, become part of the creative whole and like the light (daylight and/or artificial light), an integral part of the artistic totality. It is my intention to unite the viewer and the artistic creation in a unique, personal and long lasting visual experience. It is particularly important in the achievement of that experience that my glassworks are viewed over time from different angles, and under varying conditions, both environmental and personal. In each circumstance – night, day, mood, emotion – different meanings can be both expressed and perceived. Light and shadow, too, play a strong role in achieving the overall effect.
Peter Young pedro & indi ‘Indi’ which I originally made in London in 1995, had always been a dark, claustrophobic and unresolved work. I re-made it in 2006 changing several pieces of glass. The streaky amber on the left for instance, replacing a previously demanding convolution, now provides breathing space and access to the dense narrative opposite. Also the little pig dog character under the hill is a warm and sustained highlight. ‘Pedro’ (2005) and ‘Pia’ (2006) are similar studies of bird-like creatures stepping out with their young. While both versions are dotty they each have different moods and qualities of character. The more expressive painting of ‘Pia’ in particular, was a means of grounding saccharine tendencies and raising aboriginal. ‘Rocket Bird and Slug Boy’ (2007) ...? Well, that is just tabloid nonsense. Rocket Bird would never snog a slug.
Donna Coogan
artists cvs
Trabeg House, Douglas Road, Cork, Ireland Mobile No: 00 353 872527964 donnacoogan@hotmail.com
education:
Art in Cathedral, St. Finbarr’s Cathedral, Cork.
1994 /1994 Bachelors Degree (Hons.) in Design(Glass).
Our Space: Subud Hall, Carrigaline, Co. Cork.
National College of Art & Design, Dublin,
2004 Facilitator: Cobh Women’s Art Group, Sirius Arts Centre, Cobh
1991 Certificate in Visual Education (ACCS) Dun Laoghaire College of Art & Design, Dublin.
professional experience
2002 Invited Lecturer, Glass Department, NCAD, Dublin.
1978 Foundation Year, College of Marketing and Design, Dublin.
2001 05 Irish Cultural Representative for the World Subud Association
exhibitions:
2001 Invited Lecturer, History of Art Dept., NCAD, Dublin.
2007 Sculpture in Context, Botanic Gardens, Dublin. 2006 Genesis, Dungarvan Arts Centre, Co Waterford, Ireland
The Light Fantastic
2002 Sculpture in Context, Botanic Gardens, Dublin.
The Red Tent, Siofra Group, Botanic Gardens, Dublin. Sculpture in Context, Airfield, Dundrum, Dublin. 2005 6”x6”, 411 Galleries, China.
2000 Instructor of Assembled Glass Panel Workshop, NCAD, Dublin. 1999 Instructor of Fused Glass Workshop in the National Sculpture Factory, Cork. 1998 Invited Lecturer, Glass Department, NCAD, Dublin.
work experience:
Touring Hangzhou, Shanghai, Beijing
1992-94 Abbey Stained Glass Studio, Kilmainham, Dublin.
Sculpture in Context, Airfield Gardens, Dublin 14.
Working with resident glass painter half day per week.
Sculpture in Context, Botanic Gardens, Dublin.
publications:
C2, Crawford Municipal Art Gallery, Cork. 6ftx6ft, National College of Ireland, Dublin. 2004 Art Trail ’04 Cork. Decade II, Sirius Arts Centre, Cobh, Cork, 2003 Decade, Sirius Arts Centre, Cobh, Cork. Bigger is not Better, Mullingar Arts Centre, Mullingar Signal Art Centre, Bray, Dublin. 2002 – 03 Love, Touring Exhibition, France, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Italy & England.
PEETERS, Vital, STAINED GLASS, The Art of Crafts LALOR, Brian, THE ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF IRELAND, Gill & Macmillan Ltd. 2003 SHAW-Smith, David, TRADITIONAL CRAFTS OF IRELAND, Thames & Hudson. 2003
collections: National College of Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
Nora Duggan
Debbie Dawson
Address: Highfield, Carbury, Co. Kildare Tel.: 353 (0)87 2248194 website: www.noradglass.com Email: info@noradglass.com
the artworks. The finished artworks were installed in March of 2004 and are available for viewing in new Council Chambers, Portlaoise, Co. Laois, by appointment.
2000 Cork County Council Residency, National Sculpture Factory, Albert Road, Cork
education:
1991 Artist in Residence, Lavit Gallery, Father Mathew Street, Cork
1995-96 Business Appraisal Training Program, FAS, Galway
2002 Sue Ryder Foundation commissioned a selection of stained glass windows for a restored Georgian House, Dalkey, Co. Dublin. These included the front entrance, chapel doors, backlit chapel feature windows & backlit hall window.
commissions:
Masterclasses:
exhibitions:
exhibitions:
2002 Public Art Commission for Radiotherapy/Oncology Department, Cork University Hospital, Cork
2006 Ursula Huth, “Marks on Glass”, Fire Station Artists Studios, Dublin
2005; “Reflections”, The Old Schoolhouse, Kinnegad, Co. Westmeath.
2003 Art Trail, X Marks The Spot, T.W.I.L. House, Albert Quay, Cork
2001 Selected for Limerick County Council’s panel of artists
Alice Maher, “Collections in Art”, Fire Station Artists Studios, Dublin
2003; “History of Irish Glass”, National Museum of Ireland - Decorative Arts & History, Collins Barracks, Dublin
2003 Formative Influences, Lavit Gallery, Father Mathew Street, Cork
2001 Awarded Public Art Commission for Kilmallock Housing Scheme, Kilmallock, Co. Limerick
Address: 1 St. Joseph’s Place, Blackrock Road, Cork, Ireland Tel: 00 353 21 4968871 or 00 353 86 3643460
education: 1996-1999: Masters Degree – History of Art & Design and Complementary Studies, National College of Art & Design, Dublin 1986-1990: National Diploma in Fine Art (Painting and Stained Glass) – Distinction Crawford College of Art & Design, Sherman Crawford Street, Cork
2003 Art in the Cathedral, St. Finbarr’s Cathedral, Cork 2002 Art in the Cathedral, St. Finbarr’s Cathedral, Cork 2000
Art Trail, Various Venues, Cork
1998 Art at the Bodega, The Bodega, Coal Quay, Cork 1998 Scoip ’98, Siamsa Tire Theatre & Arts Centre, Town Park, Tralee, Co. Kerry 1997 5th Women’s International Glass Conference & Workshop,Crawford Municipal Art Gallery, Emmet Place, Cork 1997 Dancing With Light, Stained Glass Exhibition, An Damhlainn Gallery, Spiddal, Co. Galway
residencies: 2001 Campbell Bewley Artist in Residence, Carrigaline Community School, Carrigaline, Co. Cork
2001 Glasswork for Luigi Malone’s Restaurant, Emmet Place, Cork In addition to my personal work I teach stained glass on a part-time basis at the Crawford College of Art & Design, Sherman Crawford Street, Cork. I am also a member of the National Sculpture Factory and a member of the Contemporary Glass Makers of Ireland. My work is represented in both public and private collections.
1988-92 Visual Communications,College of Marketing & Design, Dublin
2005, Dennis Grey, “Life Drawing”, Old Schoolhouse, Kinnegad, Co. Westmeath 2003 Paul Marioni, “Whats the big Idea”, Crystal Lotus Studio, Fermanagh
2003: “ArtSelect”, Meeting Hse. Sq.,Temple Bar, Dublin 2, Group exhibition
2002 R. Repass, “Intro to Hot Glass”, Crystal Lotus Studio, Fermanagh
2000: RDS Craft Competition, travelling exhibition. Nora was awarded second prize in the glass category
J. Lepisto, “Sand Casting Glass”, Crystal Lotus Studio, Fermanagh
1997 /98 An Damhlann Gallery, Spiddal, Co. Galway - both juried group shows.
2001 Keith Seybert, “Lost Wax Casting”, Fire Station Artists Studios, Dublin
collections:
Maud Cotter, “Glass in Art”, Fire Station Artists Studios, Dublin 2000 Keith Seybert, “Lost Wax Casting”, Fire Station Artists Studios, Dublin Michelle O’Donnell, “Glass Fusing”, Fire Station Artists Studios, Dublin
commissions: 1999/2006 Nora has completed many commissions for private clients. Images can be viewed and references given on request. 2003 “Laois, A Celebration”, Awarded by Laois County Council , Seven stained glass panels celebrating 100 years of the County & the role of the council. Nora worked closely with a committee comprised of council workers, past & present, to create and make
Stephen Mc Donnell, Dublin, private collector. Frank Taaffe, Athy, Co. Kildare, private collector of contemporary art and literature. Aiden Dunne, France, private collector of antique & contemporary glass.
awards: 2006 Offaly County Council Support for Artist Scheme 2005
CCoI 50% Scheme
Peadar Lamb
Eva Kelly Address: Primrose Hill, Calverstown, Kilcullen, Co. Kildare Tel.: 00 353 45 485389 or 00 353 87 6728960 Email: evakelly@esatclear.ie Website: www.evakellyglass.com Eva trained in Australia in the 1980s under the expert eyes of master glass painter Paddy Robinson and glass fusing expert Warren Langley. She also attended masterclasses in drawing with Roger Waller (Australia) and Marie Hensey (Ireland), glass fusing with Boyce Lundstrum (United States), glass fusing and casting with Karen LeMonte (United States) and glass painting and engraving with Ursula Huth (Germany). Eva set up her studio in Ireland in 1986.
2004 Red Bull Art of Can exhibition, RHA Gallery, Dublin
Address: Mill Lane Studios, Glenside Industrial Estate, Palmerstown, Dublin 20 Tel.: 00 353 1 6236685 or 00 353 87 2717782 Website: www.peadarlamb.com Email: info@peadarlamb.com
collections:
education:
Little Sisters of the Assumption, Dublin
2002 Red Bull Art of Can exhibition, Glasgow, Scotland
1985 Dun Laoghaire School of Art and Design, Dublin
Irish Ambassador’s Residence, Tokyo, Japan
public commissions:
1985-88 National College of Art and Design, Dublin
ESB Head Office, Dublin
2003 Ten Times Tables, group show, National Craft Gallery, Kilkenny 2003 Royal Dublin Society, Horse Show Craft exhibition
Kildare Parish Church
Radio na Gaeltachta, Galway American College, Oscar Wilde Window, Dublin
Mater Hospital, Dublin Private Collections: Ireland, Britain, Denmark, USA and Japan
Dominican Church, Newbridge
1989 Brierley Hill, Glass Centre, Birmingham, U.K.
Kepak Head Office, Co. Meath
solo exhibitions:
Irish Ambassador’s Residence, Lisbon, Portugal
Scellig Hotel, Dingle, Co. Kerry, windows
2004 New Works, Ink on Paper, The Market House, Monaghan
National Museum of Ireland – Decorative Arts & History, Collins Barracks, Dublin
2005 Edges and Boundaries, The Hunt Museum, Limerick
awards:
Dooleys Hotel, Birr, Co. Offaly,
2006 Interiors Show with Six Times Tables, Royal Dublin Society, Dublin
Naas Golf Club, Co. Kildare
group exhibitions:
Curragh Golf Club, Co. Kildare, large
1996 NCAD 250th Anniversary Show, Dublin
2003 Per Cent for Art, Monaghan Market House, Monaghan
2006 Red Bull, Art of Can, Co. Derry
Cill Dara Golf Club, Co. Kildare
2005 ICE, two-person exhibition in Riverbank Gallery, Newbridge, Co. Kildare
Curragh Race Course, functions area
1997 Solomon Gallery, Dublin Kenny Gallery, Spiddal, Co. Galway
2004 An Chomhairle Ealaíon, exhibition grant, Philadelphia, USA
2005 Design Week, Six Times Tables, Habitat, Dublin
Fairyhouse Race Course
1998 West Cork Arts Centre, Skibbereen, Co. Cork
2006 Per Cent for Art, Archbishop Ryan Senior School, Co. Dublin
McDermott Officers Mess, Co. Kildare,
1999 RHA Annual Exhibition, RHA, Dublin
2007 Per Cent for Art, County Library, Leitrim
2005 Fusion, Eigse, Carlow, three-person exhibition
Butt Mullins Restaurant, Co. Kildare
2001 Antonia Fraser Gallery, London, U.K.
television/radio:
Kepak Group, Hacketstown, Co. Carlow,
2005 Christmas Presence, National Craft Gallery, Kilkenny
Holy Family College, Newbridge, Co. Kildare,
2004 Museum of Modern Art, Annual Crafts Chow, Philadelphia, USA
1993 Arts Show, RTE Radio, Sculpture in Context
exhibitions: 2006 St. Patrick’s Presence, London, Crafts Council of Ireland
2005 Hunt Museum, Limerick, Collectors exhibition 2005 Interiors Show, Royal Dublin Society, Dublin 2005 Gerard Manley Hopkins group exhibition, Kildare 2004 East of Boston, group show, Jury’s Hotel, Boston 2004 Six Times Tables exhibition, Habitat, Dublin
Kilkea Castle Hotel, Athy, Co. Kildare, Templemore Arms Hotel, Co. Tipperary,
1998 Ice Studio Rental Grant
Leinster Arms Hotel, Athy, Co. Kildare
1996 Cursaí Ealaíne, RTE
Rose Hill Hotel, Kilkenny,
2000 DY2K TG4 2000 Splanc – Saol Daite Documentary, TG4 2002 October, ‘Open House’, RTE 2006 Soiscéal Pháraic, TG4
Sandra Miley
Mary Mackey Coachman's House, Laurel Walk, Bandon, Co. Cork, Ireland e-mail: marymackey60@eircom.net Born Cork, Ireland, 1960
2006 Catherine Hammond Gallery, Co. Cork Spirit Journeys, Glass Artists Gallery, Australia
education:
2005 Crawford Gallery, Cork Miriam Bailey Gallery, Bandon, Co. Cork Cork Public Museum, Cork Lavit Gallery, Cork Sculpture in Context, Dubin Catherine Hammond Gallery, Glengarriff, Co. Cork
1983 NCEA Diploma in Fine Art (Painting) Crawford College of Art & Design, Cork
professional experience 2000-2002 Editor Glass Society of Ireland Newsletter 2001 Visiting Lecturer, Glass Department Central St Martins College of Art, London 1998-2002 Visiting Lecturer, Glass Department, National College of Art & Design, Dublin
workshops & lectures 2006 Lecture Firestation Artists Studios, Dublin. 2004 Lecture National Museum of Ireland, Collins Barracks, Dublin, Ireland Lecture Almonte Arts Centre, Ontario, Canada 2003 Lecture Glass Society of Ireland, Dublin, Ireland
2004 Women’s International Glass Workshop & Exhibition, Toronto, Canada Boyle Arts Festival, Roscommon, Ireland Sculpture in Context, Botanic Gardens, Dublin C2, Crawford Gallery, Cork 2003 Inspirational Awakening, Irish Contemporary Glass Touring exhibition 2003 - 2005 Lavit Gallery Group Exhibition, Cork 50/50 Exhibition, Temple Bar Gallery, Dublin 2002 Glass With Altitude, Auckland, New Zealand CASe, Lavit Gallery, Cork Sculpture in Context, Dublin Art Trail, Triskel Arts Centre, Cork
31 St. Brigid’s Avenue, North Strand, Dublin 3 Tel: 00 353 1 856 1090 mobile: 00 353 87 972 2138 Email: sandramiley@myway.com D.O.B. 16.01.1966
education
1986-1989 BA (Hons) Edinburgh College of Art.
2006 Dublin Art Glass Award. Crafts Council Purchase Award. RDS National Crafts Competition Award.
Patrick Muldowney
exhibitions 1996 Stained Glass. SIPTU Living Art Space, Dublin. Selected group show curated by AAI. 1996 Stained Glass. SIPTU Living Art Space. Solo Show. 1996
Stained Glass. Group Exhibition.
1997 Stained Glass. An Damhlann, Co. Galway. Group Show. 2001 Stained Glass and graphite drawings. Ceardlann na gCoisbhealach, Co. Donegal. Solo Show/ artist in residence.
publications
2001 Land Marks, Cochrane Gallery, London
Stained & Art Glass, Dr Judith Neiswander and Caroline Swash
2000 Out of the Corner of My Eye, Lavit Gallery, Cork
14 Stained Glass Walks in London, Caroline Swash
2005 Stained Glass. National Crafts Exhibition Competition. RDS, Dublin.
1995 Crawford Art Gallery Showcase, Cork
The Art of Stained Glass, Chris Peterson
group exhibitions (since 2000)
Neues Glas Winter 2004
2006 Stained Glass. National Crafts Exhibition Competition. RDS, Dublin.
2008 Gathering Light, International Glass, Liverpool, United Kingdom, and Chartres, France
collections
National Craft Winners Touring Exhibition.
Crawford Municipal Art Gallery, Cork
public/corporate collections
Duchas Irish Heritage Service, Dublin
1995 Office of Public Works. Govt. Office in Tullamore.
Private Collections in Ireland and United Kingdom.
Received Artist’s Exemption.
1989-1991 Return to La Thuasnerie.
solo exhibitions
Izukougen Stained Glass Museum, Japan
1997
1985-1986 La Thuasnerie Atelier du Vitrail, Mehun-SurYevre, France. Apprentice glass painter.
2002 Stained Glass (slides). Jakarta, Indonesia. Invited as part of a group to represent Irish contemporary glass.
2007 Cead Exhibition, China Through Irish Eyes, Exhibition & Seminars, Beijing, China Glass Exhibition, National Craft Gallery, Kilkenny, Ireland
awards
1996
ESB International, Head Office.
1996
AMS Systems Ireland.
2006
Crafts Council of Ireland.
2006 Office of Public Works. The Labour Relations Committee.
Address: 12 St. Alban’s Road, South Circular Road, Dublin 8. Telephone: 00 353 87 7689347 Email: Patleros@hotmail.com Patrick Muldowney ANCAD is a Master Artist in Glass and Restoration. A graduate of the National College of Art and Design, Dublin and postgraduate of the International Institute of Mosaic, Ravenna, Italy. He worked at the renowned Greenland Studios, New York, USA for a number of years. Patrick Muldowney established his own studio in 1990 where he has completed many domestic and ecclesiastical commissions in Ireland, the U.K., Africa and the U.S.A. Born and educated in Kilkenny City, Ireland
education: 1973 Enrolled, National College of Art and Design, Dublin 1977 Graduated, Hons. Diploma in Design, specialising in Illustration 1978 Postgraduate in Education, NCAD specialising in Stained Glas and Fabric painting 1982 The study of Mosaic, International School of Mosaic, Ravenna, Italy 1979-81 Trained in the painting of Stained Glass at the Greenland Studios,specialising in the restoration of Tiffany windows for the American wing of MOMA, New York 1982-87
Lectured at NCAD in Stained
Killian Schurmann Glass and the Liberties Vocational School 1988-89 Part-time artist, Abbey Stained Glass Studios, Kilmainham, Dublin 1989-90 Lectured at College of the Bahamas,Nassau, Bahamas 1995 Lectured at Dublin Institute of Technology, Subjects: Drawing and Rendering
major commissions: 1992 St. Fiacres Church, Loughboy, Kilkenny Our Lady of the Waters, Bomadi, Nigeria 1996 The Holy Faith, Cork Anna Nagle, Edmund Rice 1999 Mount Taber Nursing Home, Sandymount, Dublin 4 1999-2003 St. John Vianney, Artane, Dublin 2002 The Parish Church, Crookstown, Co. Kildare, St. Francis, St. Callum 2003 Sacred Heart Fathers, Kilmainham, Dublin 2004 Poor Clares Convent, Cork, St. Clare, St. Francis
Tel/Fax: 00 353 1 4939836 Email: killian_schurmann@hotmail.com www.thermocollage.com Born in 1962 in Dublin, Killian Schurmann trained as a Scientific Glass Blower in Germany in 1980 before embarking upon a ten year-period of travel. Working as a journeyman Killian visited glass studios throughout the world and worked in the field of studio glass art, which subsequently formed the foundation for his studio in Dublin. During the 1990s between private commissions and exhibition work Killian perfected the art of glass by creating new colour compositions, textures and ways of controlling the passage of light. Throughout the past five years Killian has developed a style of composition and subject matter, which distinguishes his output as a glass artist in sculptured work and glass panels. Killian continues to travel extensively, taking inspiration for his work from both urban and rural landscapes. In 2006 his work was exhibited in the John Martin Fine Art Gallery, London. Now working from his glass studio at the foot of the Dublin Hills, Killian has, over the past twenty years, exhibited his work throughout Europe. An integral part of Killian’s style is using de-nitrification in order to control the opacity of the glass.
collections(1994-2006) Bank of Ireland – indoor installations St. Stephen’s Green Hotel, Dublin US Ambassador’s Residence, Dublinoutdoor installation National Self-Portrait Collection, Limerick Allied Irish Banks, Art Collection Allied Irish Banks – Indoor Installation Verbal Art Centre, Derry – indoor installation
Dept. of Health, Dublin
Allied Irish Investment Bank
Waterford Land Registry Office
Cervantes Institute, Spain
Nissan Ireland
President Mary Robinson
museums (1994-2006)
Dermot Desmond
National Museum of Ireland – Decorative Arts & History, Collins Barracks, Dublin
Dublin County Council
Dublin Castle
ABN Bank
Ulster Museum
Conrad Schmitt, USA
National Botanic Gardens
commissions:
Glass Museum, Wertheim, Germany
Windows for Royal College of Surgeons, Albert Theatre, Dublin
exhibitions (1983-2006) Ireland – Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin, 2000-2006 Germany, Austria, Belgium, Luxembourg, France
AIB Group
Presentation Window for Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh, Scotland Dublinia-Medieval Trust Glass Sculpture, The Foyer, Bausch & Lomb, Waterford
George Walsh
Church of the Holy Family, Newington Avenue, Belfast Augustinians Church, Galway
Address: 63 Sandford Road, Ranelagh, Dublin 6. Tel/Fax: 00 353 1 4962357
Dublinia Medieval Trust
solo exhibitions:
Eyeries Church, Beara Peninsula, West Cork
Caldwell Gallery, Dublin and Belfast
St. Camillus, Killucan, Co. Westmeath
Gallery 22, Dublin
Galway Cathedral
Kenny Gallery, Galway
St. Peter’s Church, Chantilly, France
Kilcock Gallery
Black Abbey, Kilkenny
Numerous group shows in Ireland, the USA, Britain and Spain. He has shown frequently in the Royal Hibernian Academy; An tOireachtas; Living Art; Leinster Gallery; Sandford Gallery; Kilcock Art Gallery; Kenny’s Gallery, Galway; and Lavit Gallery, Cork.
Mount Sion, Co. Waterford
Church of the Irish Martyrs, Ballycane, Naas, Co. Kildare
Clongowes Wood College, Co. Kildare Our Lady of Lourdes, Parish Church, Kilcummin, Killarney, Co. Kerry Blessed Sacrament Chapel, Dublin
collections
Chapel, National University of Ireland, Galway
Kildare County Council
Newtown Church, Co. Kildare
An Taisce
Other commissions can be found throughout the Mid-Western United States, Florida, Newfoundland and Africa.
Office of Public Works
Peter Young
Elke Westen 41 Harbour View, Howth, Co. Dublin, Ireland Tel. +353 (0) 87 - 752 48 38 elkewesten@hotmail.com www.elkewesten.com Born 4th March 1967, Hattingen/Germany Since 2000 living in Ireland
education: 2002 Master of Arts 2000-2002 postgraduate student (MA, glass design) at National College of Art & Design, Dublin 1999-2000 chairperson of BBK Bergisch Land (regional Arts Council), Wuppertal, Germany 1997-2000 lecturer at University “Hildesheim", Germany 1994 assistant lecturer workshop “European Design - Design with Glass”, National University Bogotá, Columbia Since 1993 self-employed, own studio for art & architecture, colour, glass, light and graphic design
art & architecture commissions: 2007 Winner Open Competition East Down Institute of Further and Higher Education, Downpatrick, Newcastle and Ballynahinch/Northern Ireland 2006/07 Winner Open Competition Altnagelvin Hospital, Derry/Northern Ireland
Address: 55 Foster Terrace, Ballybough, Dublin 3 Tel: 00 353 1 6584957 Mobile: 00 353 86 3057585 Email: peteryoung23@hotmail.com Date of Birth: 29 June 1962, Dublin
education:
1994-1995Martin Wills Memorial Windows, Borris House Chapel, Co. Carlow
1987-1989Central St. Martin’s College of Art and Design, London, WC1
1987 to present Several private stained glass commissions including two converted churches in southern England
2006 Winner Open Competition Ulster Hospital, Renal Unit, Belfast
1979-1985 School of Art and Design, College of Marketing and Design, Dublin
permanent exhibits
2005 Winner Invited Competition State Laboratory of Ireland, Celbridge, Co. Kildare/Ireland, for Office of Public Works
Advanced Diploma in Visual Communication Design and Illustration
The Stained Glass Museum of Ely Cathedral, England; Five Dublin schools; Numerous private collections.
solo shows:
publications and reviews:
2005 Winner Open Competition Breast Check Unit, Dublin
2000 Urban Lichens Sculpture, Fire Station Artists’ Studios, Dublin
Winter 2005 Cover, New Hibernia Review, University of St. Thomas, Minnesota, USA
2005 Glass Sculpture Shekina Sculpture Garden, Glenmalure, Co. Wicklow/Ireland
1995 Memorial Windows, Cochrane Gallery, London, WC1
May 2004 Gloine, The Journal of the Glass Society of Ireland: Illustrated Profile
2004 Selected Artist (Open Competition) Integrated Arts Committee, Muckamore Abbey Mental Health Hospital, Antrim/Northern Ireland
1992 Strange Angels, Project Arts Centre, Temple Bar, Dublin
Nov.-Dec. 1992 & Sept.-Oct. 1995 Crafts Magazine, illustrated reviews by Caroline Swash
1989 Stained Glass Installation, Central St. Martin’s College, London
1993 degree as designer (B.Des.) 1998-1993 study at University “Fachhochschule Dortmund”, Germany
2004 Invited Artist ‘Sculpture in Context”, Dublin
1986-1988 apprenticeship as reprographer, printing and design company, Hattingen, Germany
2006 Stained Glass Exhibition, The Ark Cultural Centre for Children, Temple Bar, Dublin
2003/04 Winner Open Competition Cavan Innovation & Technology Centre, Cavan/Ireland
2005 Element, Garter Lane Arts Centre, Waterford
RDS Award of Excellence, Category Glass (2003)/International design Prize “FORM” (1994)/Award Student Competition “Public Art” (1993)
2005 Lead Artist in collaborative stained glass commission with The Ark Cultural Centre for Children, Temple Bar, Dublin
2006/07 Winner Open Competition Downe Hospital, Downpatrick/Northern Ireland
2004 Winner Invited Competition Carlow Credit Union, Carlow/Ireland, glass entrance
awards:
commissions:
2003 Direct Commission, Office of Public Works for Dept. of Social & Family Affairs, Dublin 2003/04/05 Direct Commission, Dept. of Education & Science, Dublin 2002/03 Winner Open Competition Letterkenny Institute of Technology, Letterkenny/Ireland, glass entrance 2002 State Art Collection of Ireland for Dept. of Education & Science, Dublin 2002 Mercer Consulting Group, Dublin
group shows:
2003-2005Contemporary Irish Glass Art, National Touring Show 1998 Painting Exhibition, Fire Station Artists’ Studios, Dublin 1998 Glass, West Cork Arts Centre, Skibbereen, Co. Cork 1997 Contemporary Glass in Ireland, Solomon Gallery, Dublin
Jan. 1994 The Independent: ‘Saving the Poor Man’s Bible’, by Tony Kelly Autumn 1992 The British Society of Master Glass Painters magazine: Illustrated Profile July 1992 The Irish Times, review by Brian Fallon Sept. 1990 Window Style by Yvonne Rees (Quatro Publishing) Jan. 1989 Sunday Telegraph Magazine, stained glass feature by Rosemary Hill
The Crafts Council of Ireland The Crafts Council of Ireland is the national design and economic development organisation for the craft industry in Ireland. Its activities are funded by Enterprise Ireland. The National Craft Gallery – set up by the Crafts Council of Ireland in December 2000 – runs a dynamic, national and international programme which aims to: - stimulate quality, design, innovation and competitiveness in the craft sector - communicate unique cultural and commercial attributes of Crafts Council of Ireland-promote the importance of quality to consumer and craft manufacturer alike - stimulate innovation in design and manufacture via special exhibition themes - encourage mutual transfer of exhibitions with other international craft agencies Enquiries: Crafts Council of Ireland, Castle Yard, Kilkenny Telephone: +353 (0)56 7761804 Email: ncg@ccoi.ie Visit us at: www.ccoi.ie
The Light Fantastic: Irish Stained Glass Art Curators: Mary Boydell and Audrey Whitty Editor: Audrey Whitty Photography: Roland Paschhoff (www.paschhoff.com) Design: Oonagh Young, designHQ (oonagh@designhq.ie) Exhibitions Programme Manager: Vincent O'Shea Gallery Assistant: Brian Byrne Press: Helen Carroll